India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

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DFID Department for International Development Reproductive & Child Health 2 - India Infection management & environment Sean Doolan, DFID India [email protected] Ruma Tavorath, World Bank South Asia [email protected] November 2004

Transcript of India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

Page 1: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment

Reproductive & Child Health 2 - India

Infection management & environment

Sean Doolan, DFID India

[email protected]

Ruma Tavorath, World Bank South Asia

[email protected]

November 2004

Page 2: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Outline

National context

RCH2 outline

Para-SEA

Scoping volumes, activities & phasing

WHO & SWAPs frameworks

Integration into outputs & outcomes

Focusing on most vulnerable

Establishing process

Page 3: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Government of India

“Sustainability is not an option but an imperative. … the environment is not to be seen as a stand-alone concern. It cuts across all sectors of development” (Three environmental targets)

GoI Tenth Plan

National Environmental Policy (in prep.)

Constitution of India: Articles 21 (right to life –food, water, environment), 47 (food & health), 48A (protection of environment), 51A (fundamental duties)

Variable capacity, MoEF, CPCB, SPCBs

Page 4: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment

Environment MDG -

challenged in India

Ranks 116th of 149 countries in 2002 Environmental Sustainability Index (WEF)

120th of 122 countries for water quality (2003 World Water Assessment)

Environmental degradation costs 4.5-8% GDP (in line with growth)

Natural disasters - 50 million people a year

185 million people living in slums

300 million below $1 a day

Waste management weak

Page 5: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Why environment screening?

Identify and exploit environmental

opportunities e.g. synergies & savings

Identify and manage environmental risks

e.g. historical problems, reputational risks

Ensure that activities are consistent with

policy & international best practice

Bank procedures – do no harm to do good

Page 6: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment RCH 2

Sector Wide Approach (SWAp)

Many development partners – DFID,

World Bank, EC, GTZ, USAID, UNICEF,

UNFPA, WHO …

Government of India, Ministry of Health

& Family Welfare (2 departments)

State governments

Page 7: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Why strategic?

Scale - £4.5 billion, 5 years

Like-minded partners? – harmonisation, SWAp

Political will - injection safety, GAVI, AD syringes

Health systems development projects

National Rural Health Mission – new govt

Merging H & FW – single Secretary

Alignment vertical health programmes

Inter-sectoral convergence

Page 8: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Objectives?

Communities utilize and benefit from

responsive, equity-sensitive and quality-

based Reproductive- and Child/Newborn

Health Care services

IMEP underpins RCH 2 operations to deliver

better health outcomes for most vulnerable

groups – meet national legislative

requirements

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Methods

Logframe components

WHO tools - www.healthcarewaste.org

Formal appraisal schedule

Working groups

Special studies – linkages, not integration

Consultancy

MoHFW working group

Backstaging & advocacy

Page 10: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Logframe outputs

1. Decentralised

management

2. Training/HR

3. M&E – barriers to

equitable service &

outcomes

4. Gender-sensitive family

planning

5. Maternal health &

institutional deliveries

6. Adolescents

7. New-born &

child health

8. Urban slums

9. Tribal health

Page 11: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Logframe outputs

Planning guidelines & training

Standards for services

Infrastructure

Asset management

Utilities

Procurement & logistics

Immunisation

Infection management policies & strategies

Institutional mechanisms

Training & BCC / IEC

Page 12: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Issues

Immunisation & institutional deliveries

Behaviour change, sharps safety, training

Infection control & quality of care, provision of services

Construction & asset management

Cold chain, utilities, watsan

Immunisation & injection safety

POPs, incineration, distribution

Public private partnerships

Biomedical waste handling rules, compliance

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment WHO Rapid Assessment Tool

Health care facilities Storage

Staff Collection &

transport

Waste generation Off-site transport

Segregation &

handling

Waste treatment

Containers Final disposal

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment WHO Rapid Assessment Tool

Policy & regulations Institutions

Policy & budget

Sanitation &

wastewater

Water – drinking &

other uses

Energy

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Scoping

63% injections unsafe in India

69% public hospitals

74% immunisation clinics

60% private sector facilities

2 million new Hepatitis B cases a year

400,000 new Hepatitis C cases

30,000 new HIV-positive cases

1.5 million deliveries PHCs, CHCs

Page 16: India Healthcare RCH2 - Sean Doolan & Ruma Tavorath, Oct 2004

DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Scoping

280 million AD syringes

550,000 outreach sites

2,150 tonnes plastic

615 tonnes needles

1.25 million sq m construction

62,000 tonnes construction waste

2,700 blood storage facilities

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Outputs

Infection Management & Environment

Plan

IMEP cross-referenced in PAD, aide

memoires, indicators, studies

Awareness within MoHFW, States,

development partners

Recognition of infection management

Working group established

Process for operational guidance

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Successes

Equity focus – worker, ragpicker & patient safety

EAG & NE states

Allocation for HCWM

Needle-cutters for immunisation

Duty of care – healthcare without harm

Growing awareness in Governments

World Bank & DFID partnership

Technical assistance recognition

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Successes

Framing in appropriate language

Backstaging

NGO & practitioner linkages

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Barriers

Overlapping institutions

Vertical silos

Crowded space to operate

Access to information

Effective linkages

Champions

Not business as usual

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DFID Department forInternationalDevelopment Remaining challenges

Sourcing expertise

Participation

Capacity & capacity building

Scale

Supervision

Behavioural change

Institutional linkages